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Open letter to readers: Today and tomorrow

By Lynda Waddington | 11.17.11

Wednesday was a difficult day for The American Independent News Network, which is the larger entity that operates The Iowa Independent. Our chief executive and founder announced two of our sister sites would close and their content would be moved to The American Independent.

ACS lockout continues; plan emerges to repeal sugar protections

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By Virginia Chamlee | 11.15.11

A recently introduced bill could have far-reaching impact on the U.S. sugar industry, including American Crystal Sugar, a farmer-owned cooperative that locked out 1,300 Midwest workers on Aug. 1.

Cain campaign: Farmers know more about regulations than EPA

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By Andrew Duffelmeyer | 11.15.11

The chairman for Herman Cain’s Iowa effort says the campaign “relied more on the word of farmers than Washington regulators” in deciding to run an ad containing claims the Environmental Protection Agency says are false.

Mathis wins, Democrats maintain Senate control

Liz Mathis
By Lynda Waddington | 11.08.11

The Iowa Senate will remain under the control of a slim 26-25 Democratic majority when it reconvenes in January 2012.

Press Release

PR: Nation should work to address veterans’ challenges

By Press Release Reprints | 11.11.11

BRUCE BRALEY RELEASE — As US involvement in Iraq and Afghanistan ends, it’s more important than ever that our nation works to address the challenges faced by the men and women who fought there.

PR: Honoring veterans, help in hiring

By Press Release Reprints | 11.11.11

CHUCK GRASSLEY RELEASE — A difficult job market is challenging the soldiers, sailors and airmen who have protected America’s interests by serving in the Armed Forces.

PR: In honor of America’s veterans

By Press Release Reprints | 11.11.11

TOM LATHAM RELEASE — No one has done more to secure the freedom enjoyed by every single American than our veterans and those currently serving in the armed services.

PR: Honoring and supporting our nation’s veterans

By Press Release Reprints | 11.11.11

DAVE LOEBSACK RELEASE — Veterans Day is an opportunity to reflect on the service of generations of veterans and to honor the sacrifices they and their families have made so that we may live in peace and freedom here at home.

Moderates seek a place in Iowa’s GOP

By Jason Hancock | 05.01.09 | 12:03 am

Is there a place for moderate Republicans in Iowa’s GOP?

The Republican Party of Iowa is selecting a new chairman to replace Steward Iverson.

It’s a question that doesn’t have an easy answer. Social and evangelical conservatives have gained more and more power within the state party for years, slowly building their influence both in Iowa politics and nationally due to the first-in-the-nation presidential caucuses.

The Republican Party of Iowa used to be defined by its moderates and pragmatists, said former Lt. Gov. Joy Corning. Republican Govs. Robert Ray and Terry Branstad helped the party hold on to Terrace Hill for nearly 30 years, she said, but now many who consider themselves centrist Republicans feel abandoned.

“I hear it all the time,” said Corning, who runs the Iowa chapter of the centrist Republican Leadership Council. “I have had so many people say to me personally, ‘I did not leave the party, the party left me.’ What has happened is some moderates have opted out instead of staying and trying to be part of the party structure and make a difference. This started years ago.”

During his four terms as governor, few would have considered Branstad a moderate. But in today’s party, the former governor would certainly fall into that category, showing how far to the right the GOP has drifted, Corning said.

Social and evangelical conservatives have a powerful voice in the Republican Party of Iowa because they participate, said Steve Roberts, a former chair of the Republican Party of Iowa who for many years represented the Iowa GOP on the Republican National Committee.

“The Republican Party, like the Democratic Party, is dictated by who shows up and participates,” Roberts said. “Frankly, the more conservative Republicans, the social evangelical conservatives, not only show up but they are organized. The more moderate folks are frustrated and don’t want to spend the time that it takes to make a difference.”

Roberts has seen the evolution of his party first hand. At last year’s state party convention, Roberts, a relatively moderate Republican, was replaced as a male representative to the Republican National Committee by Steve Scheffler of the Iowa Christian Alliance. The female representative position was won by Kim Lehman, director of Iowa Right to Life. Many saw these moves as the evangelical base asserting its authority within the party.

“There is no question the party has gotten more conservative,” Roberts said. “But that’s because they’ve been the ones showing up and working.”

The problem many within the party point out is that, as the party has grown more conservative, it has seen its numbers dwindle in the statehouse. In the last three election cycles, Republicans have watched as Democrats took control of both chambers of the legislature and the governorship.

A cause for hope

Iowa Republicans have a lot going in their favor as the 2010 elections get closer, Roberts said.

“I think we are in a really good position following the legislative session,” he said. “Issues like spending, the Democratic plan to end federal deductibility on state tax returns, various pieces of labor legislation and gay marriage have put us in a good position in terms of having hope of election success in 2010.”

Republicans successfully fought off several pieces of the Democratic agenda during the legislative session, despite being in the minority, and the Iowa Supreme Court’s ruling on same-sex marriage has energized the social conservatives.

“But we need a strong gubernatorial candidate to articulate our beliefs,” Roberts said. “There have been a lot of names come up, but no one has stepped forward or chosen to pursue it.”

Former Republican Govs. Robert Ray, left, and Terry Branstad.

Former Republican Govs. Robert Ray, left, and Terry Branstad. Between the two of them, the GOP held the governor's office from 1969 to 1998.

But while the gay marriage issue is an opportunity, it also poses a potential pit fall for the party, Roberts said, if it ends up being the main issue associated with GOP candidates. He cited the 1998 campaign for governor between Republican Jim Ross Lightfoot and Democrat Tom Vilsack. Lightfoot focused his attacks in the closing months on Vilsack’s voting record in the legislature on the issue of restricting or banning nude dancing.

“It backfired on him,” Roberts said. “People had other issues that were more important to them. I think gay marriage is something that is an important issue for a lot of people, but with the economy the way it is, focusing solely on social issues could be a mistake.”

Not holding the governor’s office for more than a decade has contributed to making the GOP more conservative, said Dennis Goldford, a professor of politics at Drake University.

“The more Republicans are a party defined by state legislative districts, which are by nature more homogeneous than the statewide population, so you can ignore people who think differently, the more conservative the party will be,” he said. “With no executive, it’s going to get more conservative.”

Searching for the moderate’s candidate

Civic Skinny, the anonymous gossip columnist for Des Moines alternative newsweekly Cityview, reported rumblings of a group of moderates, headed by Branstad, Ray, Roberts and former GOP gubernatorial candidate Doug Gross, who were trying “to settle on a moderate candidate to run against Bob Vander Plaats and Steve King and Christopher Rants and all those other very conservative Western Iowans who want to be governor.”

Roberts denied being part of a secret plan to choose a gubernatorial candidate.

“That conversation is happening, but is not limited to me, Gov. Branstad, Gov. Ray and Doug Gross,” he said. “There are a lot of people discussing it. Ray, Branstad, Gross and I have no official position in the party, so none of us are out there picking candidates. I find that many places I go the question does come up ‘Who are we going to get for a candidate?’”

However, Gross announced Thursday that he will speak to the press about a recent poll he helped commission that shows “that the Iowa Republican electoral base is large enough and cohesive enough to form the foundation for a winning electoral collation in Iowa in the 2010 election.” He will also lay out a plan for his party to emerge from the political wilderness.

Since last November’s elections, which saw Democrats expand their majorities in both legislative chambers, Gross has been calling on his party to be more inclusive and focus less on social issues that are turning off a younger generation of voters.

“Our party needs to enunciate a message that’s attractive to them,” Gross said during a taping of Iowa Public Television’s “Iowa Press” just after the election. “But when our party has litmus tests associated with abortion and homosexual rights or issues such as this we drive the young people away.”

Gross is both anti-abortion and against same-sex marriage but said he believes a person’s stance on those issues alone should not disqualify them from the party. It’s a position that has won him no friends in the social conservative community, as many in the conservative blogosphere have labeled him a a “RINO,” or “Republican in Name Only,” and conservative talk radio host Steve Deace saying he “doesn’t think about [evangelical voters] any differently than the Democrats do.”

“We all know what Mr. Gross’ poll is going to say — that the Republican Party needs to free itself of Christian influence if it wants to win elections,” Deace said Thursday on his drive-time program on Iowa’s largest radio station, later adding that many are going to believe the polling is simply a way for Gross and his cohorts to regain control of the party apparatus “that they lost a long time ago.”

Deace went on to predict that because of the same-sex marriage issue ,the 2010 GOP gubernatorial primary would be one of the ugliest in memory.

But with the right candidate at the top of the ticket, the GOP can overcome any differences and be in a good position to win in 2010, Corning said.

“We need a gubernatorial candidate who embraces the big tent and is not focused on the divisive issues but on the main issues Iowans care about,” she said. “Iowans care about education, the economy, the environment and fiscal responsibility. I think a Republican candidate who runs on those issues could be elected.”

The party can’t win without social conservatives, she said. “But it can’t win without moderates either.”

The key, Roberts said, is to find someone who can bridge the gap.

“We used to say the conservatives in the Republican Party and the radicals in the Democratic Party don’t have anywhere else to go,” he said. “You can’t lose them cause they aren’t going to go vote for the other side. But they do have a place to go. They can stay home and not work to get out the vote. We saw that in 2000 when Bush and Gore virtually tied versus 2004 when Bush got out the conservative vote and won. “

While it would appear a strong social conservative candidate would easily win in the GOP primary, which is dominated by those voters, it all depends on who exactly enters the race, Roberts said.

“That’s how Bob Ray got in 40 years ago,” he said. “He was running against two conservatives, and either one of those two individuals would have won the nomination if they both hadn’t been running. They split the vote and Governor Ray went on to win.”

Follow Jason Hancock on Twitter


Comments

  • slincoln

    How unfortunate that even the “moderate” republicans feel that taking away civil liberty is an “important” issue.

    • RegularJoe

      Do they really feel that way or are they just parroting the words to keep out of trouble?

      • slincoln

        I wish I knew.

  • http://www.angelfire.com/ky/kentuckydan/CommitteesofCorrespondence/ kentuckydan

    The vulnerability of the system IMO as it stands now is that a well organized cohesive group can dominate and control the Party organizations. Starting with the Precinct Caucuses, When our Election Code was originally set up, the Precinct was your neighborhood, you KNEW your neighbors, their families perhaps for generations, A Caucus were a group of people who knew each other and chose, Delegates to the County Convention and County Central Committee Members from those they knew, respected and trusted to speak with their voices in the next rung of the Party structure.

    Today a Caucus is a roomful of strangers, who are usually willing to let whoever starts the Caucus continue to run it and if they happen to be part of an group that is well organized they can control who ends up in those positions.,

    This bothers me so I have decided to start what I term a Grassroots Non-Issue based initiative.

    I plan with the help of my County Committee members to start having a few backyard cookouts, maybe some picnics of the folks in our Precinct that belong to my Party with ONE Primary Goal

    That the people in the Precinct get to know each other, so that when they meet next and in the future in Caucus rather than a roomful of strangers they will be among people they know and can make an informed decision on who their local Political Representatives in the Party Structure will be,

    I intend to use these gatherings as well as the Internet, Facebook to be exact to form a sense of Community in my Precinct I suggest any who might be in agreement do the same in their Precinct.
    If you wish to see my beginning structure you will find it here

    http://www.facebook.com/home.php#/group.php?gid…

    Linn County Iowa Precinct 38 GOP

  • http://www.angelfire.com/ky/kentuckydan/CommitteesofCorrespondence/ kentuckydan

    The vulnerability of the system IMO as it stands now is that a well organized cohesive group can dominate and control the Party organizations. Starting with the Precinct Caucuses, When our Election Code was originally set up, the Precinct was your neighborhood, you KNEW your neighbors, their families perhaps for generations, A Caucus were a group of people who knew each other and chose, Delegates to the County Convention and County Central Committee Members from those they knew, respected and trusted to speak with their voices in the next rung of the Party structure.

    Today a Caucus is a roomful of strangers, who are usually willing to let whoever starts the Caucus continue to run it and if they happen to be part of an group that is well organized they can control who ends up in those positions.,

    This bothers me so I have decided to start what I term a Grassroots Non-Issue based initiative.

    I plan with the help of my County Committee members to start having a few backyard cookouts, maybe some picnics of the folks in our Precinct that belong to my Party with ONE Primary Goal

    That the people in the Precinct get to know each other, so that when they meet next and in the future in Caucus rather than a roomful of strangers they will be among people they know and can make an informed decision on who their local Political Representatives in the Party Structure will be,

    I intend to use these gatherings as well as the Internet, Facebook to be exact to form a sense of Community in my Precinct I suggest any who might be in agreement do the same in their Precinct.
    If you wish to see my beginning structure you will find it here

    http://www.facebook.com/home.php#/group.php?gid…

    Linn County Iowa Precinct 38 GOP

  • http://www.angelfire.com/ky/kentuckydan/HotIssues/ Dan Kauffman

    The vulnerability of the system IMO as it stands now is that a well organized cohesive group can dominate and control the Party organizations. Starting with the Precinct Caucuses, When our Election Code was originally set up, the Precinct was your neighborhood, you KNEW your neighbors, their families perhaps for generations, A Caucus were a group of people who knew each other and chose, Delegates to the County Convention and County Central Committee Members from those they knew, respected and trusted to speak with their voices in the next rung of the Party structure.

    Today a Caucus is a roomful of strangers, who are usually willing to let whoever starts the Caucus continue to run it and if they happen to be part of an group that is well organized they can control who ends up in those positions.,

    This bothers me so I have decided to start what I term a Grassroots Non-Issue based initiative.

    I plan with the help of my County Committee members to start having a few backyard cookouts, maybe some picnics of the folks in our Precinct that belong to my Party with ONE Primary Goal

    That the people in the Precinct get to know each other, so that when they meet next and in the future in Caucus rather than a roomful of strangers they will be among people they know and can make an informed decision on who their local Political Representatives in the Party Structure will be,

    I intend to use these gatherings as well as the Internet, Facebook to be exact to form a sense of Community in my Precinct I suggest any who might be in agreement do the same in their Precinct.
    If you wish to see my beginning structure you will find it here

    http://www.facebook.com/home.php#/group.php?gid…

    Linn County Iowa Precinct 38 GOP

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